Crank: As Dirty as the
Name Sounds
The methamphetamine epidemic in
the rural America has many law enforcement officials, drug
treatment centers and citizens of this great country baffled.
It is difficult to handle the situation with an individual
after being addicted to meth, let alone figure out how to
prevent it from spreading or occurring in the first
place.
The easily-obtained ingredients
to manufacture crank (another name for meth) and the mobility
of the labs make it difficult for law enforcement officials
to track down a high percentage of potential busts. Even when
these labs are tracked down and the manufacturers arrested,
the toxic chemicals used in the process are hazardous and
cost thousands to be properly disposed of.
The recent HBO documentary about
crank filmed three families in Iowa battling this insidious
concoction and its associated behaviors. The stories were
accurate depictions of what is often the scene with someone
using crank, complete with graphic details of the drug use
through smoking, snorting and shooting it into the
bloodstream.
Rotting teeth and disastrous
living conditions are usually associated with these rural
hellholes. Add to that the erratic behavior and an extremely
unhealthy lifestyle and you’ve got the exact opposite
of the ‘American Dream.’
One Community Sentencing and
Probation Officer in Oklahoma, where the meth lab busts have
reached over 1,000 per year confided, “These people
cooking [meth] have a little sex ring going on too that
we’ve found video tapes of. It’s disgusting how
they’ve completely degraded themselves and their
families.”
Addressing the
problem
For whatever reason, be it
physical or emotional pain or discomfort, boredom, peer
pressure or any other problem of life, when a person becomes
addicted to crank (or any drug) treatment is what is often
given, but rehabilitation is what is needed to fully recover.
The definition for treatment is to care for or deal with
medically or surgically. This is where the substitute drugs
and “quick patch” programs fall in place, but
don’t always provide an effective
solution.
The definition for rehabilitation
is to restore to a former capacity. This simply means for a
person to be in the condition he was in before he had the
ailments and the subsequent addiction. The three main
barriers to overcoming addiction are the cravings (mental and
physical), guilt and depression associated with the drug
use.
Many people that have come in
contact with meth addicts feel that full rehabilitation is
impossible for them; that the damage is permanent. It is true
that the toxic chemicals used to cook meth are extremely
hazardous and one could cause permanent damage, but if caught
early enough and if the right program was used, the
individual can be restored.
In today’s society, there
are few programs that effectively address and handle these
areas of addiction on the way to full rehabilitation. One
such organization is Narconon Arrowhead, utilizing the
drug-free social education methodology of L. Ron Hubbard and
achieving a success rate greater than 70%, well over double
the national average. Through replacing vital nutrients
stripped by drug use, dry-heat sauna detoxification therapy
and a series of life skills courses, addicts regain the
respect and responsibility for themselves to become happy,
ethical and productive members of society again.
There are hundreds of former meth
addicts that are now living healthy lives again because of
Narconon Arrowhead.
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Story©2003 Narconon of
Oklahoma, Inc. All Rights Reserved. NARCONON is a registered
trademark and service mark owned by Association for Better
Living and Education International and is used with its
permission.